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Journal ArticleDOI

Lice (amblycera and ischnocera) as vectors of eulimdana spp. (nematoda: filarioidea) in charadriiform birds and the necessity of short reproductive periods in adult worms

Cheryl Bartlett
- 01 Feb 1993 - 
- Vol. 79, Iss: 1, pp 85-91
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TLDR
The short period of production of microfilariae of species of Eulimdana in charadriiform birds and Pelecitusfulicaeatrae in coots may be related to the fact that transmission is by permanent ectoparasites (lice) constantly exposed to microfiliariae in the skin and the dangers of lice acquiring lethal numbers of microFilariae.
Abstract
Lice transmit species of Eulimdana. Larvae of Eulimdana wongae are described from Austromen- opon limosae and Actornithophilus limosae (Amblycera) and Carduiceps clayae (Ischnocera) collected on a marbled godwit (Limosa fedoa). Larvae of Eulimdana bainae are described from Austromenopon phaeopodis (Amblycera) and Lunaceps numenii phaeopi (Ischnocera) from a whimbrel (Numenius phaeopus). Adults of species of Eulimdana in charadriiform birds and Pelecitusfulicaeatrae in coots produce microfilariae for a short period only and then die and are resorbed (species of Eulimdana), a phenomenon called ephemerality, or become reproductively senescent but remain alive (P. fulicaeatrae). Microfilariae inhabit the skin and presumably survive for a prolonged period. The short period of production of microfilariae may be related to the fact that transmission is by permanent ectoparasites (lice) constantly exposed to microfilariae in the skin and the dangers of lice acquiring lethal numbers of microfilariae. Ephemerality may have evolved in species in which adults occupy sites where, when they die, they are harmlessly resorbed (e.g., species of Eulimdana in the neck). Reproductive senescence may have evolved in species that occupy sites where, if they were to die, they might provoke a life threatening inflammation (e.g., P. fulicaeatrae near joints in the legs).

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Citations
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Comparative effects of mites and lice on the reproductive success of rock doves (Columba livia)

TL;DR: Results for lice constitute the first experimental test of the impact of Ischnocera on avian reproductive success, and reasons for the different effects of mites and lice are discussed, including the relationship of horizontal (mites) and vertical (lice) transmission to the evolution of virulence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parasite biodiversity and host defenses: chewing lice and immune response of their avian hosts

TL;DR: The results suggest that the taxonomic richness of different parasite taxa is influenced by different host defenses, and they are consistent with the hypothesis that increasing host allocation to immune defense increases Amblyceran biodiversity.
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Anti-parasite behaviour of birds.

TL;DR: A brief review of anti-parasite behaviours in birds, divided into five major categories: body maintenance, nest maintenance, avoidance of parasitized prey, migration, migration and tolerance, and briefly considers the interaction of different behaviours, such as sunning and preening.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathology and epizootiology of dirofilaria scapiceps (leidy, 1886) (nematoda: filarioidea) in sylvilagus floridanus (j. a. allen) and lepus americanus erxleben

TL;DR: Dirofilaria scapiceps was found between the synovial sheath and tendons, i.e., within the tendon sheath, in the ankle region of eastern cottontail rabbits and snowshoe hare populations, and hares are considered abnormal hosts of D.Scapiceps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Notes on Some of Osborn's Mallophaga Types and the Description of a New Genus, Rotundiceps (Philopteridae)

Robert L. Edwards
- 01 Jan 1952 - 
TL;DR: There is a small series of Herbert Osborn's Mallophaga types, comprising nine species, in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, which were described as new in his 1896 paper, Insects Af fect in Domestic animal.